Breaking the Trap: What a Real High‑End Intelligence Test Would Require
For most of my life, I’ve watched people try to measure intelligence by building ever more elaborate puzzles. The assumption seems to be that if you make a problem sufficiently obscure, sufficiently time‑consuming, or sufficiently idiosyncratic, you will eventually force the “true” intelligence to reveal itself. But obscurity is not depth, and idiosyncrasy is not insight. What these tests usually reveal is not intelligence but endurance—how long someone is willing to sit in cognitive mud for the sake of a number. I’ve taken enough of these tests to see the pattern. The early items feel like real thinking: clean structure, genuine novelty, a sense that the problem is speaking a language the mind already knows. Then the test drifts. The structure dissolves. The items become private riddles written in the test designer’s dialect. Solving them requires not intelligence but a willingness to inhabit someone else’s logic for weeks or months. At that point, the test is no longer measuring me....